Kenneth E. Noll
Illinois Institute of Technology
77 Papers
1K Citations
Kenneth E. Noll is an academic researcher from Illinois Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Deposition (aerosol physics) & Particle. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 75 publications. Previous affiliations of Kenneth E. Noll include Phenomenex & Dong-a University.
Chat about Author
Papers
•Book
Adsorption technology for air and water pollution control
Kenneth E. Noll,Vassilios Gounaris,Wain-sun Hou +2 more
- 01 Jan 1991
TL;DR: Adsorption technology has been used for a diversity of applications in both air and water pollution as mentioned in this paper, such as control of organic compounds, such as VOCs, pesticides, phenolics, and complex synthetic organics.
356
A fundamental analysis of the isotherm for the adsorption of phenolic compounds on activated carbon
TL;DR: In this article, a procedure is developed to correlate the Freundlich coefficients with the basic properties of three components involved in adsorption (adsorbate, adsorbent and solvent).
134
Dry deposition and particle size distributions measured during the Lake Michigan Urban Air Toxics Study
TL;DR: The mass and elemental dry depositional flux was measured in Chicago, IL, in South Haven, MI, and over Lake Michigan onboard the R/V Laurentian during the Lake Michigan Urban Air Toxics Study.
100
Characterization of atmospheric concentrations and partitioning of PAHs in the Chicago atmosphere.
TL;DR: It has been demonstrated that partitioning of PAHs shows a consistent difference between samples taken when wind came from off the land rather than off the water, and experiments generally agreed well with the soot+octanol based model predictions.
92
Characterization of the deposition of particles from the atmosphere to a flat plate
TL;DR: In this paper, a Rotary Impactor was used to measure the airborne concentration of coarse particles ( > 1 μm diameter) simultaneously with the measurement of particle dry deposition flux with a smooth surrogate surface with a sharp edge mounted on a wind vane.
91